| Unit | Length | Depth | Bottom width | Slope (H:V) | Pipe OD | Pipes | Compaction | Waste | Truck cap. | Net backfill | Loose volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metric | 60 m | 1.6 m | 0.9 m | 1.0 | 0.30 m | 1 | 10% | 5% | 8 m³ | ~112.7 m³ | ~130.2 m³ |
| Imperial | 200 ft | 5.0 ft | 3.0 ft | 1.0 | 12 in | 1 | 10% | 5% | 10 yd³ | ~86.6 yd³ | ~100.1 yd³ |
- Top width (trapezoidal): T = B + 2·S·D where S is side slope (H:V).
- Cross-section area: A = (B + T)/2 · D
- Excavation volume: V_exc = A · L
- Pipe displacement: V_pipe = (π·OD²/4) · L · N
- Net backfill (in-place): V_net = max(0, V_exc − V_pipe − V_ded)
- Loose volume with allowances: V_loose = V_net·(1+Comp/100)·(1+Waste/100)
- Truckloads: Loads = V_loose / TruckCap
- Select the unit system used on your drawings or site measurements.
- Choose trench shape: rectangular for shored vertical sides, trapezoidal for sloped excavation.
- Enter length, depth, and bottom width. Add side slope (H:V) or provide a top-width override.
- Enter pipe outside diameter and the number of pipes to subtract displacement.
- Subtract any other deductions such as manholes or encasement volumes.
- Set compaction loss and waste allowance to estimate required loose material.
- Enter truck capacity to estimate haul needs, then download CSV/PDF.
1) Why Backfill Volume Matters
Backfill quantity affects schedule, cost, and safety. A 60 m trench that is 1.6 m deep can easily exceed 110 m³ in-place backfill, and loose delivery volume can rise above 130 m³ after allowances. Estimating early improves procurement, reduces idle equipment time, and keeps the work zone clear for inspections.
2) Geometry and Trench Profiles
Trench volume is driven by cross-section area. Rectangular trenches use vertical sides, while trapezoidal trenches widen with depth using side slope (H:V). Even a modest 1:1 slope increases top width by 2 × depth, which can significantly increase excavation and backfill. Use the top-width override when shoring rules or drawings already define the top width.
3) Deductions and Pipe Displacement
Net backfill is not the same as excavation volume. The calculator subtracts pipe displacement using the pipe outside diameter and pipe count along the trench length. It also allows an additional deduction volume for items like manholes, duct banks, encasement, or bedding zones measured separately. These deductions help align estimates with pay quantities and material deliveries.
4) Compaction Loss and Waste Allowance
Field placement typically requires more loose material than the final in-place volume due to compaction and handling losses. Typical compaction allowances range from 5–15% depending on moisture, lift thickness, and equipment. Waste allowance (often 2–8%) covers spillage, over-excavation corrections, and cleanup. Applying both factors provides a practical ordering volume.
5) Haul Planning and Reporting
Truckload estimation converts the loose volume into haul requirements. For example, 130 m³ of loose material with an 8 m³ truck capacity is about 16–17 loads. Use CSV/PDF exports to share assumptions, document revisions, and communicate quantities to suppliers and crews. Always confirm geometry, compaction specs, and material type during pre-task planning.
1) What units does the calculator support?
Choose Metric for meters and cubic meters, or Imperial for feet and cubic yards. Pipe outside diameter uses meters in Metric and inches in Imperial to match common specifications.
2) When should I use rectangular versus trapezoidal?
Use rectangular for shored vertical walls or narrow trenches with near-vertical sides. Use trapezoidal for open cuts with side slopes. Trapezoidal is typically more realistic for unshored excavations.
3) What does the top width override do?
If you already know the top width from drawings or safety requirements, enter it to override slope-based widening. This is useful when benching or shoring dictates a fixed top width.
4) How do compaction loss and waste affect ordering?
They increase the required loose volume above in-place backfill. Compaction covers densification during placement, while waste covers spillage and handling losses. Use project specs or historical site data to set both.
5) Can I account for multiple pipes or conduits?
Yes. Set the pipe count to subtract displacement for multiple parallel runs. If pipes have different diameters, run the calculator per diameter and combine the displacement or adjust using deductions.
6) What should I enter under other deductions?
Use it for any known volume that should not be backfilled with soil, such as manholes, encasement concrete, or duct bank blocks. Enter the total volume in the same output unit system.
7) Should I round truckloads up?
Usually, yes. Haul planning should allow for partial loads, access constraints, and delivery timing. Round up to the next full load when ordering to avoid shortages and re-mobilization costs.